ANN ARBOR -- Raises and contract extensions have been handed to all three Michigan basketball assistant coaches.

According to U-M athletic director Dave Brandon, assistants Bacari Alexander, LaVall Jordan and Jeff Meyer have "agreed to multi-year extensions with improved compensations -- much deserved improvements in their compensations."

Michigan associate athletic director for media and public relations Dave Ablauf told MLive all three contracts are four-year extensions running through the 2017-18 season.

All terms of the contracts were not immediately available.

While Jordan had one year remaining on an existing contract paying $185,000 in 2014-15, Alexander and Meyer each had two years left on their deals, paying $165,000 and $170,000, respectively.

"They've all made a commitment to Michigan and extended their commitment to Michigan," Brandon told MLive on Thursday. "It was a great process with all three of those guys."

According to Brandon, the new contracts were finalized "probably in the last three weeks."

Coming off appearances in the 2013 Final Four and 2014 Elite Eight, Michigan head coach John Beilein said in early June: "We're looking at the whole program right now, making sure that all of our assistants' salaries are competitive, especially given our success."

Both Alexander and Meyer were already owed significant raises following the 2014-15 season, with Alexander earning an additional $25,000 and Meyer receiving a $30,000 bump.

All three of Beilein's assistants joined his staff midway through his seven-year tenure at Michigan.

Following the 2009-10 season, former assistants Jerry Dunn and John Mahoney left the program to "pursue other opportunities." Shortly after, in the summer of 2010, ex-assistant Mike Jackson left for Purdue.

Michigan has now appeared in three straight NCAA tournaments, going 83-27 overall in that span. A shared Big Ten regular-season title was won in 2011-12, while 2013-14 produced an outright regular-season championship.

"I couldn't be more pleased," Brandon said of the new contracts for Alexander, Jordan and Meyer. "I think the world of John, but one of the things that he did as a leader, coming off of that 2010 season, is he took a hard look at his staff and made significant changes and brought in Bacari and LaVall and really created a staff that works together so well. They trust one another. They understand one another. They feed off one another and compliment one another in a way that's truly special."

Meyer previously served as Beilein's "administrative specialist" prior to being promoted an assistant position in 2009-10 following Dunn's departure.

In 2013-14, Alexander, Jordan and Meyer earned $46,000 apiece in bonuses following a season that produced a 28-9 record, an outright Big Ten title and a trip to the Elite Eight. Each received $26,000 in team performance bonuses and a $20,000 stay bonus for working under contract through April 1, 2014.

With identical postseason bonus structures, all three assistants earned $15,000 for the outright Big Ten championship, $5,000 for qualifying for the NCAA tournament, $1,000 for U-M's opening-round NCAA tournament win, $2,000 for the Round of 32 win and $3,000 for the Sweet 16 win.

Now entering his eighth season at Michigan, Beilein earns $2.45 million annually and is signed through the 2018-19 season.

Brendan F. Quinn covers University of Michigan basketball and football. Follow him on Twitter for the latest on Wolverines hoops. He can be contacted at bquinn@mlive.com